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An Alternative to Google Earth in Construction

2022-08-24
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Illustration: © IoT For All

Have you ever spent more time than you’d like searching for the information you need? Or grown tired of patching together a complete picture of your project with multiple software platforms and dense folders full of drawings and other documentation? You’re not alone. You need good Google Earth alternatives.

'Despite significant innovation in the last 10 years, modern drawing management tools are missing a critical dimension of your data: real-world location.' -UnearthClick To Tweet

We hear the same every week from project managers, engineers, and superintendents; there aren’t many software solutions out there built especially for large infrastructure projects. Juggling Google Earth and drawing management software only goes so far.

You lose time trying to navigate your project, data falls between the cracks, and people or materials aren’t in the right place at the right time. But what Google Earth alternatives are out there?

Fortunately, there’s a more intuitive way to capture, manage, and share construction data: geolocated drawings. By visualizing your drawings and layering project data on a map, you’ll have everything you need in one place – easily digestible by anyone on your team.

Why Real-World Location Matters in Construction

Contractors are left with thousands of documents, photos, and other data that are siloed across platforms or simply crammed into folders, lists, and spreadsheets.

The current technology available means the built world is reduced to a stack of files.

We’ve seen with our customers that tracking materials or simply sharing a comprehensive view of your project with your team can be a serious headache.

For this reason, contractors are turning increasingly to mapping to better visualize and organize key data. But current methods leave much to be desired.

The Mapping Status Quo: Ad Hoc & Time-Consuming

Construction teams understand the value of real-world context and often turn to some form of mapping:

  • Printing out large sheets of satellite imagery to hang on the walls of an office
  • Exporting drone or satellite imagery as a PDF and marking it up manually in software like Bluebeam
  • Using Google Earth or Google MyMaps to make simple annotations

We’ve seen teams pair these annotated maps with spreadsheets or other attached documentation. But while these teams’ creativity and pragmatism should be admired, their solutions are limited.

In each case, contractors have patched together a solution that:

  1. is challenging to update to match the reality on the ground
  2. displays only a partial picture of the project
  3. is siloed from other platforms
  4. is time-consuming to create and maintain

With this in mind, it’s unsurprising that construction teams don’t use maps more extensively. Maps should bring clarity to a project, not bring further complications.

The problem here is clear: Contractors are forced to create their own mapping solutions or leverage software that’s not built for construction.

Google Earth & MyMaps Aren’t Designed for Construction

Google Earth and Google MyMaps are excellent mapping tools for the public, not project engineers. Construction teams need Google Earth alternatives.

Though these platforms are used widely, they risk wasting your time, create complicated workflows, and fall short of the true potential of construction mapping.

Let’s examine the pros and cons.

Pros:

  • Both Google Earth and MyMaps are free. Hard to argue with that, right?
  • Google Earth offers easy-to-use drawing and annotation tools while MyMaps provides an added degree of customization.
  • They integrate with other Google products and provide straightforward mapping from a spreadsheet.

Cons:

  • Google Earth and MyMaps don’t support a mixed dataset (drone imagery, construction drawings, field documentation, etc.), provide limited detail on the work represented, and must be juggled with other platforms or documentation for a context-rich record.
  • It’s challenging to collaborate with a team within Google Earth and MyMaps, these tools are siloed from your other construction software, and export options are limited.
  • Google Earth and MyMaps don’t function offline and have limited mobile capabilities; they’re not built for the field.

Google Doesn’t Connect Office, Trailer, and Field

Google mapping products are great for the general public, but they’re clearly not designed for construction, where collaboration is critical and you’re handling several different data types.

By sticking with Google products, you risk contributing to the same problems that may have driven you to maps in the first place: information silos, bad data, and time wasted tracking down accurate information.

We see an alternative to Google products in the evolution of construction drawings. While Bluebeam, PlanGrid, and Fieldwire have brought contractors into the digital age, the next generation of drawings is on a map.

Where Modern Drawing Management Falls Short

Despite significant innovation in the last 10 years, modern drawing management tools are missing a critical dimension of your data: real-world location.

Construction Drawings: Past & Present

Paper drawings went the way of the dinosaur with digitization (with documents stored digitally in complex filing systems). Here, Bluebeam offers a powerful yet easy way to mark up your digital drawings just as you did by hand.

Everything’s also been linked in one place for easy access in the field. For example, PlanGrid equips boots on the ground with real-time access to up-to-date drawings.

And software like Fieldwire promises streamlined collaboration and the potential to attach key documentation to your drawings for a more complete record of work.

There’s debate over which of these products is superior, but it’s clear they’ve transformed the way contractors manage drawings.

Unfortunately, Bluebeam, PlanGrid, and Fieldwire share something else in common; they display construction drawings stripped of their real-world context.

Google Earth Alternatives: The Next Generation of Construction Drawings

Modern drawing management tools need to be paired with a map.

It just makes sense to see your drawings on a map – whether that’s a superintendent in the field directing crews on the day’s work, a project manager assessing progress across multiple projects, or an engineer sharing updates with an owner. Whatever you have hidden deep in a folder structure can see the light of day on your geolocated drawing.

Geolocated Drawings

You can stake your drawings to real-world coordinates, toggle drawings on and off to reflect different phases of your project, add project stations, and overlay relevant environmental and geographic information.

Mixed Dataset

For further context, you can visualize the contents of your folders (RFIs, change orders, permits, equipment, materials, and more) or dump a thousand images and watch as they’re automatically geolocated.

Real-time Progress

Plus, this information isn’t static. Crews can log inspections and other updates from the field with simple data collection tools – so you can track this progress instantly against your drawing.

With a real-time map, teams can navigate your site and fieldwork with ease. Where is their daily assignment? The relevant documentation? The materials and equipment? A worker can use their phone’s GPS to see exactly where they’re standing amid the information.

Ultimately, these map-based drawings not only provide great Google Earth alternatives but are also the future of construction data management.

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  • Construction
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  • Construction
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  • Mobile
  • Utilities

参考译文
建筑中谷歌土的替代品
你是否曾经花了太多的时间来搜索你需要的信息?或者厌倦了用多个软件平台和充满图纸和其他文档的密集文件夹拼凑项目的完整画面?你不是一个人。你需要好的谷歌地球替代品。我们每周都会从项目经理、工程师和负责人那里听到同样的话;目前还没有很多专门为大型基础设施项目开发的软件解决方案。切换谷歌Earth和绘制管理软件只能到此为止。你浪费了时间来导航你的项目,数据落在裂缝之间,人和材料没有在正确的时间出现在正确的地方。但是,还有什么谷歌地球的替代品呢?幸运的是,有一种更直观的方法来捕获、管理和共享施工数据:地理位置图纸。通过在地图上可视化你的图纸和分层项目数据,你将有你需要的一切在一个地方-很容易消化你的团队中的任何人。承包商们将面临成千上万的文件、照片和其他数据,这些数据被分散在不同的平台上,或者被塞进文件夹、列表和电子表格中。目前可用的技术意味着构建的世界被简化为一堆文件。我们已经从我们的客户那里看到,跟踪材料或简单地与您的团队共享项目的全面视图可能是一件非常令人头痛的事情。由于这个原因,承包商越来越多地转向地图来更好地可视化和组织关键数据。但目前的方法还有很多不足之处。构建团队理解现实环境的价值,并且经常转向某种形式的映射:我们已经看到团队将这些带注释的映射与电子表格或其他附加文档配对。尽管这些团队的创造力和务实精神值得赞赏,但他们的解决方案却很有限。在每一种情况下,承包商都拼凑出了一个解决方案:考虑到这一点,建筑团队不更广泛地使用地图就不足为奇了。地图应该为项目带来清晰性,而不是复杂化。这里的问题很明显:承包商被迫创建他们自己的地图解决方案或利用不是为建设而建的软件。谷歌Earth和谷歌MyMaps是面向公众而非项目工程师的优秀制图工具。建筑团队需要谷歌地球替代品。虽然这些平台被广泛使用,但它们可能会浪费您的时间,创建复杂的工作流程,并不能真正发挥建筑映射的潜力。谷歌地图产品对普通大众来说很好,但它们显然不是为构建而设计的,在构建中,协作是至关重要的,你需要处理几种不同的数据类型。通过坚持使用谷歌产品,您可能会导致最初驱使您使用地图的相同问题:信息竖井、错误的数据,以及浪费时间来跟踪准确的信息。我们在建筑图纸的演变中看到了谷歌产品的替代方案。Bluebeam、PlanGrid和Fieldwire将承包商带入了数字时代,而下一代图纸则是在地图上绘制的。尽管在过去的10年里有重大的创新,现代绘图管理工具仍然缺少数据的一个关键维度:真实位置。纸质图纸随着数字化(文件以数字化方式存储在复杂的归档系统中)而消失了。在这里,Bluebeam提供了一种强大而简单的方式来标记你的数字图纸,就像你用手做的那样。所有的东西都被连接在一个地方,以便在野外使用。例如,PlanGrid为地面部队配备了实时访问最新图纸的设备。像Fieldwire这样的软件承诺简化协作,并有可能将关键文件附加到您的图纸,以更完整的工作记录。 关于这些产品中哪一种更好,人们存在争议,但很明显,它们改变了承包商管理图纸的方式。不幸的是,Bluebeam、PlanGrid和Fieldwire还有一些共同之处;它们展示的是脱离现实环境的建筑图纸。现代绘图管理工具需要与地图相配合。在地图上看到你的图纸是有意义的——无论是在现场指导工作人员的工作,一个项目经理评估多个项目的进度,还是一个工程师与业主分享更新。无论你隐藏在文件夹结构深处的是什么,都可以在你的绘图中看到天光。您可以将绘图粘贴到真实世界的坐标上,打开和关闭绘图以反映项目的不同阶段,添加项目站点,并覆盖相关的环境和地理信息。对于进一步的上下文,您可以可视化文件夹的内容(RFIs、更改订单、许可、设备、材料等),或者转储1000张图片并观看它们自动定位的过程。另外,这些信息不是静态的。工作人员可以使用简单的数据收集工具记录检查和其他来自现场的更新,因此您可以根据图纸立即跟踪进度。有了实时地图,团队可以轻松地导航您的站点和现场工作。他们的日常任务在哪里?相关的文档吗?材料和设备?工作人员可以使用手机的全球定位系统(GPS)来准确地看到自己在信息中所处的位置。最终,这些基于地图的图纸不仅提供了伟大的谷歌地球方案,而且也是建筑数据管理的未来。
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